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Friday, January 27, 2012

Hats are a great way to keep in body heat. Besides that, hatdudes are ultra HOT!!!

Your Mom may have said, growing up, Don't forget your hat, before you go outside to play.

As adult gay men, those words of wisdom are more true today.

With the cold winter weather, body heat escapes more readily through the head.

Even if you guys have a full head of hair, wearing a hat when it is cold outside keeps your body warm.

So follow these guys and wear your hat. It is the sexy and healthy thing to do.







Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Brian H. Crede, images of men we love

25.11.2011 , Tom's Blog



“The majority of my artwork consists of cut and layered paper, a style I derived from my hands-on experience with airbrushing. My palette is either black and flesh-tones; shades of white, beige, and brown; or vivid pure colors. The art works are shallow 3-dimensional constructions and the interaction of light and the movement of the viewer causes the shadows to change – creating a somewhat kinetic piece of art.”

WOOOF, Studio V (the art of vincent) shares his ultra hot male images with us

http://theartofvincent.blogspot.com/?zx=5abf66dbe29bf629

Check it out!!!




Antonio Saldana, a young emerging erotic male artist

This male artist captures hot hairy sexy guys as they play hard and work hard within their environment.

It is raw, mantastic art. Check him out.

 

ANTONIO SALDANA



Antonio Saldana is on Facebook


 
Antonio Saldana is a very interesting young Spanish artist. He lives in Barcelona, and has been published several times in the press.


ANTONIO SALDANA, SPANISH
INK ON PAPER - 2007
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED TO THE ARTIST





ANTONIO SALDANA, SPANISH
INK ON PAPER - 2007
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED TO THE ARTIST




ANTONIO SALDANA, SPANISH
INK ON PAPER - 2007
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED TO THE ARTIST






Sunday, January 22, 2012

Gay Men Come in All Shapes and Sizes. Embrace the hot variety. There is someone for everyone.

You guys know that I like to feature the hot hairy gay male form. But heck, that's just me.

I can likewise find something hot about every guy, like eye color, hair, physique, smile, legs, etc.

Every one has sexy qualities about themselves.

I will attach photos of hairy guys because I feel they are constantly unrepresented in gay media.

But again, every guy is hot. Embrace your strong points. Love yourself.



Muscle-bound men or twinks with six-packs. Take your pick. Open a gay magazine or walk down the street of your gay ghetto and you see images of the modern gay clone everywhere, and they’re there for one reason.

Sex sells.

Young gay men often don’t know any better but are searching for an image to compare themselves to. When they find images of the modern gay clone, they then have a template for what they believe a loveable and accepted gay male should look like.
But is this reality?


A Systemic Problem
How is it that we as a community have come to a point where it seems as though only fat-free muscular builds and thin physiques define attractiveness and worthiness of love?


First, take a moment to reflect on how you developed your sense of who you are.


This process was likely heavily influenced by how much your sexuality plays a part in your life. If you are gay, like it or not, your sexuality plays a huge role in your life. I don’t need to repeat how often we hear messages that being gay is immoral, disgusting, and threatening to American culture.


What other kinds of messages are we given? Mainstream media presents us with a selection of caricatures of gay men that can be described as feminine and weak.


Think about it. When was the last time a strong, masculine gay male was portrayed in mainstream American media?

Can’t think of anything? I certainly can’t, but I could be missing something.


Gay men in general do not like to identify with mainstream media’s image of the effeminate gay male, but we are often lumped into that group by people who are unfamiliar with gay culture. To counteract any impression that their being gay implies any degree of femininity, some gay men become hypermasculine (or “straight-acting”).


Most of us have heard someone say something like, “I’m gay because I like men. If I liked fags, I might as well be straight and be with a woman.” Given this common belief, men who are manlier might seem more attractive. This “attraction” is actually a reaction to your negative perception of femininity.


In other words, you might not actually be attracted to the masculine guy in front of you. You may simply be running away from the image of the “effeminate and weak” gay man. In doing so, you can take pride in knowing that you’ve replaced one stereotype (the sissy gay man) with another (the heterosexually-influenced masculine man).

Some gay men are so sensitive to the idea of male femininity that they are painfully reminded of the mainstream image of gay men as effeminate and weak. The feeling of revulsion and disgust that you may experience can be described by what psychologists recognize as internalized homophobia (a topic for future articles).

These observations are not meant to imply that you need to embrace your inner feminine self. Rather, they are meant to point out that knee-jerk reactions to feminine qualities in other men may actually fuel one’s internalized homophobia. These programmed reactions also damage the community’s self-image by perpetuating an impossible expectation that everyone should be masculine, muscular, or thin.

For example, gay media recognized the trend against femininity long ago and now maintains the hypermasculine stereotype. When was the last time a shirtless average-looking man was featured on the cover of a popular gay magazine?

Instead, we continue to be presented with hypermasculine caricatures of gay males. But that’s all they are – caricatures. ( Gay men do come in all shapes and sizes, embracing the diversity is fundamental in liking who we are.)

You may believe that being muscular or thin is an important factor for attracting another man. If so, you are not alone. Many gay men worry about finding a man to be in a relationship with, and most believe that they will magically find a worthwhile relationship if and only if they reach the ideal physique that we see in gay media.

Keep wishing on a star, fellas. Relationships don’t happen that way.

The Slippery Slope Toward Acceptance and Love
As human beings, we want acceptance and love from others. USJOCK’s response to the previous article in this series demonstrated that gay culture tends to link acceptance and love with having certain body types that are unattainable for most people. I should point out that those body types are not completely out of reach for everyone. We can make some progress toward this supposed prerequisite for love and acceptance naturally through healthy workout and diet habits, and other guys often notice our progress.

We like this kind of attention and we want more of it, so we understandably might work out more to gain muscle or go on different and more restrictive diets to lose fat and tone up.

At some point, the majority of us reach our biological limit and people stop noticing our progress. If you are able to achieve the gay clone stereotype at this point, congratulations! Your relationship will appear magically to you presently.

If you reach your biological limit and do not fit the stereotype of being muscular or thin, you might feel unloved and unaccepted by the gay community simply because you don’t look a certain way. You can try to break through your biological limit through excessive exercise, abusing supplements, and other out-of-control behaviors that I described in the previous article, but I would not recommend it.

Either way, your sense of self-worth will hang on whether you fit the gay clone stereotype. In a sense, you will be addicted to the attention you get from others based on your physique, and you will do anything to keep that attention.

This kind of mundane obsession with body images must stop.

Why do we allow some of us to perpetuate a lack of compassion within our community? How is it that we have allowed body-image concerns to distract some of us from issues that matter most? Snap out of it and use your brain for a second!

Could it be that mainstream media is intentionally trying to keep us down by reinforcing the effeminate and weak gay male image? Could our reactions to this image possibly be distracting us from developing our individual internal sense of self-worth or furthering our ongoing fight for equality? One needs only look to the feminist movement to see that this kind of distraction has happened before to keep women down.

Or, perhaps our preoccupation with maintaining an unattainable body type is a well-organized effort to look “pretty” for the cameras as we fight for equality. If that’s the case, I must have missed the memo.

Stephen Brewer, M.A. is a registered psychological assistant (PSB33858) in Mira Mesa and is supervised by Angela Spenser, PhD (PSY15450). He runs a LGBT and kink-friendly practice, specializing in addictions, trauma, HIV/AIDS, and men’s issues. He can be reached at (619) 377–3120 or you can visit his website at http://www.therapybrew.com

Feel free to express your opinions. We do like what we like. We just have to be realistic.




Saturday, January 21, 2012

Men for All Seasons

We, as gay men, seem to wish for the sea and the sand.  But the beauty of exploring and enjoying everything that each of the four seasons has to offer, allows a guy to enjoy each setting in his own way.

Have you ever enjoy soaking in a hot tube while it was snowing?  Explore nature walks during autumn?
Getting back to nature in the springtime.

There are countless ways to enjoy each of the four seasons. Make them your own.








Friday, January 20, 2012

Fabrissou is a fantastic artist, who captures his furmen in their natural habitat

I really like this artist. His drawings are so ultra sexy and furtastic. See for yourself.





Are gay bars and clubs relevant today?


Tabatha takes over, a hit show on Bravo, shows how a lesbian can make a difference, and gives it her all to save this Long Beach historic gay bar.



Club Ripples -- Long Beach, CA

Club Ripples used to be the gay hot spot, but now it's empty seven nights a week. Can Tabatha bring it into the new millennium?

PREMIERE: Tuesday January 17, 10 pmEpisode Image
Club Ripples, the first gay dance club in Long Beach, CA, is owned by couple Larry Hebert and John Garcia. Ripples used to be the gay hot spot, but now it's empty seven nights a week and they blame the competition and their staff. Tabatha quickly discovers the real problems are John's penny pinching business practices and Larry's crazy club rules. To make matters worse, the bar has a bad reputation in the community and the employees' suggestions are falling on deaf ears. Can Tabatha get John and Larry to change their stubborn ways in order to save a Long Beach gay icon and bring it into the new millennium?

What other gay bars face extinction? Could Tabatha save any or all of them?

Or may be the challenge is to draw out hot men to the bars and clubs and make them feel welcum?







Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Uncompromising Images, Manly Pursuits Captured.

Artful Porn

Glenn Fry's exhibit at the Vitruvian Gallery in Washington, D.C. traces the early evolution of gay porn, before video and the Internet

by Doug Rule
When is porn art? When is an art gallery a back room?
The answer to both questions is now – at least as conceived by the Vitruvian Gallery. That's especially true this weekend, when the Capitol Hill gallery hosts a reception primed for Mid-Atlantic Leather patrons.
''Instead of leaving the [gallery space] as nice as it usually is, with drapes and oriental rugs and what have you,'' explains Vitruvian co-owner Jack Cox, ''we're re-creating it to look almost industrial, warehouse, back room.'' The effect should evoke a seedy red-light district parlor. And all for a show that silk-screen artist Glenn Fry says is meant to be ''an homage to vintage gay porn magazines.'' Though the pieces in Fry's ''unrestrained urges'' are tame by today's porn standards – largely suggestive rather than explicitly sexual – half a century and another era ago, they were considered pornographic.
''We've been joking with people that it's going to be the hottest show since Robert Mapplethorpe shut down the Corcoran,'' Cox says, referring to outrage 21 years ago over a planned show featuring homoerotic and sadomasochistic art at the Corcoran Gallery of Art. ''In truth, I saw Mapplethorpe's work, and this is far more edgy and graphic.''
''This is a very different type of show than what most people have seen in D.C.,'' adds Fry. Still, while the show does feature full-frontal male nudity, and men frolicking and even gearing up to have sex, Fry notes there isn't out-and-out sex on display.
Fry's art was mostly created from photo shoots with live models re-creating vintage images. The installation traces the early evolution of gay porn, before video and the Internet made it easier to come by. Fifty years ago, notes Fry, who is 45, gay men often lived underground, and the porn magazines reflected that. They were distributed in ragtag fashion, ''often just copied or mimeographed onto plain white paper and then stapled together and folded and handed out. Very primitive.'' Fry finds it fascinating how the images became more explicit with each passing decade, starting in the 1950s with muscular men in shorts or G-strings striking bodybuilder poses alone, followed by the beefcake imagery of muscular guys standing or working out together, and eventually men photographed naked and engaging in foreplay.
The artwork will be brought to life at the Vitruvian Gallery, which Cox opened with Larry Hall last fall to be solely devoted to male figurative art. At least some of the models Fry worked with to create the artworks are expected to attend the opening reception this Saturday, Jan. 14. And other models who regularly pose nude for art classes held at Vitruvian have signed up to be greeters and bartenders. They will be wearing the same type of clothing as depicted in the images – which means either not much or fetish wear. Fry suggests a bartender might wear mirrored sunglasses, jockstrap and shoes – and that's it. Those at the door may be in leather.
Chances are, patrons will dress the part as well. It was Fry's idea to open the show Leather Weekend. ''The whole leather movement really has a lot to do with the evolution of the whole vintage era,'' he says. ''It's very homoerotic, and a lot of people are coming into town for that type of experience.''

For example, Fry notes that the gay porn of mid-20th century America reflects the larger culture of its era, when Leave It to Beaver set the tone. ''It was just a very pretend type of world,'' Fry says. ''I think that even spilled over into the gay magazines, trying to fit that innocence.'' And also that era's pretense, when straight men justified buying Playboy for the articles. For gay or gay-curious men, says Fry, it was, ''Oh, I'm buying a magazine about bodybuilding. I want to be big like this guy, so I put this up as motivation.''
Ultimately, ''unrestrained urges'' is, says Fry, ''a cool little way to pay some homage to what our predecessors had to go through, and just the imagery that they had.''

As I have previously suggested, does life imitate art, or does art imitate life?  You be the judge.